Toronto pop-punks PUP yesterday (March 20) appeared on US TV show , Late Night with Seth Meyers, as the show's musical guests.

Watch their performance of 'Kids' above. The song comes from their new album 'Morbid Stuff', out April 5 via Little Dipper, the band’s new label in partnership with Rise/BMG, and which was produced, recorded, and mixed by Dave Schiffman (Weezer, Cass McCombs, The Mars Volta).

The record is the band's first studio album since 2016's 'The Dream Is Over'.

PUP head to Europe and the UK next month.

UK live dates

APRIL 201908 Bristol, The Fleece SOLD OUT10 London, The Garage SOLD OUT11 Leeds, Brudenell Social Club12 Glasgow, Cat House

Coming on the heels of 'Love You Back' which opened the year for Chichester-based Suns Up, they now bring out an even poppier, even synthier - even better - new offering with 'Just Because'.

Describing their infectious sound as "Music made with guitars to sing and dance to", they are not at all wrong, as the indie-pop earworm 'Just Because' - produced once again by Gethin Pearson (JAWS, Kele Okereke) - is exactly something to join in with.

“We had an idea which we kept coming back to at rehearsals. I had an opening line and a melody that I really liked, but the rest took time to get right," says vocalist/guitarist David Kelly. "I’m not a very open person, but I find in my music that I am. This song turned out to be quite personal to me about someone close and I wanted the music to do justice to that.”

We think it does.

Join Suns Up on March 26 at The Visconti Studio at Kingston Hill campus for a 'Live to Tape' session on March 26. Further details here

Directed by Roisin Murphy, Fat White Family have released a new video clip to accompany ‘Tastes Good With The Money’, a track their forthcoming third album, ‘Serfs Up!’, out April 19 via Domino Records.

The track, described as their “ode to West London”, features Baxter Drury providing a vocal input.

"I’ve been making it known for years how much I wanted to make a video for this band," says Murphy of the visual. "I’m a massive fan of FWF and I’ve been chasing this opportunity for a long time. For me there’s such a charm about them and an authenticity that’s actually incredibly rare. I knew I could not possibly work with a more magnetic bunch of performers.

"The idea of referencing Monty Python partly came out of the somewhat absurd and confusing political landscape that we are now living in Britain, Python seems prescient. The British laughing at themselves, a certain kind glee even in the loss of empire, singing as the ship goes down, well it just seems so... of the moment. There is this deep ambivalence to the establishment that resonates with the Fat Whites own irreverent world view.

"When I look at the video, what I see is the trust they put in me and I’m so proud of that. Maybe it’s because I am a performer too but they let themselves be put in a kind-of vulnerable situation; they allowed themselves to be foolish, silly and absurd in a way that could have gone tits-up, however, the result is hilarious and the performances are second to none."

Check it out below.

The Fat Whites play several in-stores next month for the album release ahead of their May tour.

“We wrote 'Headlights' as an open embrace to anyone who finds it hard to talk about their mental health, and to serve as a reminder to check up on your loved ones in this busy stupidworld," say the Bury St Edmunds trio. “We wanted the back-and-forth vocal play to feel and sound like a conversation, a playful way of communicating a message that we believe in. It’s important to be lovely to one another, and the people who have been lovely to us are the people who inspired this song.”

The dual vocals of Kim Jarvis and Catherine Lindley over a vivacious three-minute garage pop rhythm section, is also downright catchy melodically. The track is additionally set to appear on the band’s forthcoming EP.